In set theory, Silver machines are devices used for bypassing the use of fine structure in proofs of statements holding in L. They were invented by set theorist Jack Silver as a means of proving global square holds in the constructible universe.
Preliminaries
An ordinal
is *definable from a class of ordinals X if and only if there is a formula
and ordinals
such that
is the unique ordinal for which
where for all
we define
to be the name for
within
.
A structure
is eligible if and only if:
.
- < is the ordering on On restricted to X.
is a partial function from
to X, for some integer k(i).
If
is an eligible structure then
is defined to be as before but with all occurrences of X replaced with
.
Let
be two eligible structures which have the same function k. Then we say
if
and
we have:
Silver machine
A Silver machine is an eligible structure of the form
which satisfies the following conditions:
Condensation principle. If
then there is an
such that
.
Finiteness principle. For each
there is a finite set
such that for any set
we have
![{\displaystyle M_{\lambda +1}[A]\subseteq M_{\lambda }[(A\cap \lambda )\cup H]\cup \{\lambda \}}](./5fe79b9239ce264588e6812edb801bddd8f79185.svg)
Skolem property. If
is *definable from the set
, then
; moreover there is an ordinal
, uniformly
definable from
, such that
.
References